Jim Swike

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SHAKESPEARE SEEMS TO HAVE begun contemplating the possibility of retirement—not so much planning for it as brooding about its perils—as early as 1604, when he sat down to write King Lear. The tragedy is his greatest meditation on extreme old age; on the painful necessity of renouncing power; on the loss of house, land, authority, love, eyesight, and sanity itself.
Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare
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